Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Nintendo plans to release five smartphone games by 2017, with the first coming this year

Add as a preferred source on Google

When Nintendo announced in March that it had partnered with DeNA to bring games to mobile devices featuring its characters and other IP, gamers were understandably skeptical about what the end result would be. While we can’t say anything for certain until we actually see some of those games, it seems that Nintendo is taking this new strategy very seriously.

In a briefing today following up on yesterday’s report on the company’s earnings in 2014, Nintendo president Satoru Iwata said that the company plans to release five smartphone games by 2017. As was previously hinted at, the first of these games will be coming later this year.

Recommended Videos

“You may think it is a small number,” Iwata said, “but when we aim to make each title a hit, and because we want to thoroughly operate every one of them for a significant amount of time after their releases, this is not a small number at all and should demonstrate our serious commitment to the smart device business.”

As the company has already said, it won’t be porting existing titles to phones, but will instead focus on games that better fit smartphones as a platform.

“Even with highly popular IP, the odds of success are quite low if consumers cannot appreciate the quality of a game,” Iwata said. “Also, if we were simply to port software that already has a track record on a dedicated game system, it would not match the play styles of smart devices, and the appropriate business models are different between the two, so we would not anticipate a great result”

Iwata also reiterated that Nintendo and DeNA would be creating an “integrated membership service” that is meant to establish “a bridge between smart devices and dedicated game systems.” Devices that will utilize this service include smartphones, PCs, the Nintendo 3DS, and the upcoming NX console.

Near the end of the briefing, Iwata also touched on yesterday’s announcement that Nintendo and Universal have reached a “basic agreement” to deploy Nintendo rides and attractions at Universal theme parks.

And yesterday also saw other good news for Nintendo: The firm posted its first annual profit in four years.

Kris Wouk
Former Contributor
Kris Wouk is a tech writer, gadget reviewer, blogger, and whatever it's called when someone makes videos for the web. In his…
MSI’s next gaming monitor can morph between three different resolutions and refresh rates
Why buy three monitors when MSI wants you to buy one expensive one?
MSI MPG OLED 322URDX

Gaming monitors have slowly become one of the most aggressively competitive categories in PC hardware. Over the past few years, brands have raced to push refresh rates higher, improve OLED technology, reduce response times, and deliver increasingly brighter displays. But despite all those upgrades, buyers still usually have to pick one side of the experience. You either buy a super-fast esports monitor with lower resolution or a high-resolution OLED display focused more on cinematic gaming.

At Computex 2026, MSI appears to be trying to eliminate that compromise. The company has officially unveiled the MSI MPG OLED 322URDX36, which it describes as the world’s first triple-mode QD-OLED gaming monitor.

Read more
All Stellaris cheats and console commands
Give yourself the edge in galactic conquest with these cheats and commands
Fleet in Stellaris

Running a galactic empire in Stellaris is an arduous task. One bad war, an economic spiral, or one neighbor with a suspiciously large fleet can turn a promising save into a slow-motion disaster. You may want to fix a mistake, or maybe even want to test a build. And sometimes, you just want to see what happens when your empire suddenly has more alloys than sense.

This is where Stellaris console commands come in. These cheats let you add resources, finish research, control empires, spawn ships, trigger events, or bend the galaxy in ways the normal game usually won’t allow.

Read more
Is Rust cross-platform?
Yes, but there's levels to this.
Rust player running by buildings.

Rust is the kind of survival game where choosing the right server matters almost as much as choosing the right weapon. This also reflects on the platform of your choice. If you're you're friends are spread across PC, PlayStation, and Xbox, you’ll want to know exactly who can play together before anyone starts building a base.

The answer to the question is simple in one way and annoying in another. Rust supports crossplay between PlayStation and Xbox players, but PC players cannot play with console players. So yes, there is cross-platform support, but only inside the console version of the game.

Read more